These are not imaginary properties. They are abstract properties.
To answer post #2386, the law of conservation of energy is abstract. It is not imaginary. That's the relation.
It's critical that you see the difference between abstract and imaginary.
The time traveler in H. G. Wells' book, Time Machine, builds a machine that uses geometric properties to travel backwards and forwards in time. This is an imaginary device. It violates the abstract law of conservation of energy--a law I recall that you mentioned in this thread as somewhat important.
The law of conservation of energy, which is abstract, is nevertheless real. So are the behaviors of the marble machine. Every other post it seems you agree with me, then call it imaginary.
ETA:
Put it this way. Let's use the mantra: "Reality is that which exists when you stop believing in it."
Now George believes that if you, from a clear state, put three marbles into $, you get one marble in # and none in $. George is wrong, precisely because the machine does not behave that way. The fact that he believes it does has no effect on its behaviors.
That's not what I mean by "imaginary", which is is abundantly clear from my posts so far btw.
I define reality the same way as you -- it's real whether you believe in it or not, whether you observe it or not. (And there is no meaning of any symbol which has that quality, of course.)
What's real about a simulator machine are its parts and their motions. That's it.
The
target of the simulation, however, is "imaginary", not because it's something that doesn't exist (it may or may not) but rather because without taking into account the minds of the people who understand the simulation -- who designed it and know how to read it, even if that reading is entirely intuitive for their kind of brain -- it's impossible to declare that it's even running a simulation.
The behavior of the marble machine is real, we both agree on that.
Which is to say, if you drop marbles through it, they really fall through it.
The symbolic value of all that, however, is "imaginary" in the sense that unless someone's brain changes its physical state, there is no addition of large numbers taking place. (The only addition going on is the addition of small numbers of marbles to the bucket at the bottom.)
If you don't believe me, then please, give me one example in which addition of any number larger than the number of marbles going into the bucket can occur without a change in someone's brain state, and only as a result of the physical operation of the machine.
Keep in mind that if you start giving symbolic values to some behaviors of the machine and not others, if you you assert that some relationships among the physical parts are significant and others are not, if you start ignoring parts of the system (e.g. declaring marbles in the bucket "out of play"), then you are no longer describing what the system itself does, but rather how it interacts with a brain that is able to decide how to pick and choose what to pay attention to, what to ignore, and what relationships are significant.
And if you propose to swap this thing out for a part in another machine, and if you expect that machine to keep running, then you'd better expect to get exactly 4 marbles out for every 4 that go in, no more.
Yes, this larger machine itself could be an information processor spitting out symbols for large numbers, but you can't use this part in order to perform the physical work that its symbolic performance represents.
And when you try to swap a simulator machine for a brain, that's what you're doing... removing a part that does certain physical work, and adding one that merely symbolizes that work.
You're transporting Major Tom to the ship -- the space squid lives.
Now, are the laws of physics "imaginary"?
Well, all
symbols are imaginary because without a mind to perceive them it's impossible to say that they are symbols at all, much less what they might symbolize.
Yes, the light shaped like a gas pump on your dash is real, but its meaning "If you don't add gas to this machine it's going to quit working" is imaginary. (Which doesn't mean "not real", but rather "real as a physical state of the brain".)
So that's a tricky question with respect to physical laws, because these laws describe the physical workings of the universe, which are certainly real and not symbolic.
In one sense, the laws of physics
are the transformational rules of our world, and that does not change whether we're here to view it or not.
Our formulations of these laws -- which are abstractions, as you say -- are imaginary, even though (actually precisely
because) they
describe that reality.